Hi all, I'm obviously new here so I hope I'm not enacting any forum social faux pas. I just have a few questions about calcium fluoride or calcium difluoride (I'm not sure what is the convention of naming here
)
I was looking at my lecture notes from last year and it gives this chemical equation in the context of saliva:
At [F
+] > 100ppm and pH < 5; Ca
10(PO
4)
6(OH)
2 + 20F
+ 10CaF
2 + 6HPO
42- + 2OH
2i.e. Hydroxyapatite + Fluoride
Calcium Fluoride + Phosphoric Acid + Hydroxide Ion
Firstly the charge of fluoride and the balance of the hydroxide are both incorrect so I am a bit skeptical of the correctness of the rest of it. I know I don't have to know to even this depth of chemistry to pass my course but I find it a bit irritating when I don't fully understand something. I also find things harder to learn if I don't know th underlying science behind it e.g I often find that applying general chemistry, physics or calculus (I'm talking high school level here) really helps me understand things better.
Here are my queries:
1. I've written out this equation, Ca
10(PO
4)
6(OH)
2(s) + 20F
-(aq) 10CaF
2(?) + 6HPO
42-(aq) + 2OH
-(aq) and I tried putting in the states but realised I was confused on the state of calcium fluoride and also where did the H come from for the HPO
4-.
Now I'm pretty sure calcium fluoride is a solid but it is supposed to be an ion reservoir where it stays in saliva and dissolves at the optimal time (during acidic attack) but unfortunately my limited knowledge of chemistry confuses me here. If it is in saliva, does that mean it is aqueous or can a "solid" be solid chemically but not as most lay people think, and it is not necessary to be able to see them but molecularly, they are a solid structure? Perhaps it is soluble in saliva?
2. The notes and theory suggest that at a high concention of fluoride and and at lower pH which they give as pH < 5, the formation of calcium flouride is encouraged but then it also goes on to state that during acid attack on the oral environment, the calcium flouride dissolves and and provides the necessary ions for remineralisation of tooth tissue. I seem to find this notion hard to understand. Would acid attack not cause the pH to be low thus promoting calcium flouride formation and not it's dissolution into calcium and fluoride ions? or is this dissolution just a matter of need.
No matter how I look at it, adding more hydronium ions to the equation would cause the equalibirum to shift to formation of calcium fluoride if my understanding of Le Chatelier's Principle is correct thus their notion that low pH encourages the formation of calcium fluoride is correct but I can't fathom how it dissolutes during acidic attack?
Sorry for the long winded question, I look forward to being enlightened by the bright minds here. Thanks in advance!